Karla Faye Tucker has spent 14 of her 38 years on death row. When she was 23,
she and her boyfriend, Daniel Garrett, went on a 3-day drug and alcohol binge.
It was not her first. Near its end, they decided to steal a motorcycle from the
apartment of one of her former boyfriends, Jerry Lynn Dean. After breaking in,
they were surprised to find him at home, asleep in bed. Panicking, Garrett
grabbed a hammer he happened to see and began bashing Dean’s head. Karla,
in an effort to stop the "gurgling sound" Dean was making, grabbed a
pickax she found in the room and began swinging away at Dean.

Once Dean was dead, Tucker noticed someone hiding under a blanket in the
corner of the room. Pulling it back, she found Deborah Thornton, Dean’s
current girlfriend. Deciding not to leave a witness, Karla turned the pickax on
her and began swinging it again. All together, she swung that 20 pound ax at
least 20 times that evening. When she was finished, she left it embedded in
Deborah Thornton’s chest. It was still there when the police found her.

None of this is contested. Tucker confessed to it all during her trial, and before that boasted of it to friends. Naturally,
she and Garrett were
convicted and sentenced to death. Garrett died of liver disease after nine years
on death row. Karla found God and, by all the accounts of those who know her,
was transformed.

She has spent her time in prison ministering to others on death row, seeking
to help them find peace and redemption. Two years ago, she married the prison
chaplain, Dana Brown. However, as death row prisoners are allowed no physical
contact with others, she has yet to be allowed to even touch hands with her
husband.

Many people throughout the world have joined in asking that Karla’s life be
spared. Among them are Deborah Thornton’s brother, Jerry Lynn Dean’s sister,
the homicide detective who put her on death row, several former prosecutors,
Pope John Paul II and Pat Robertson, founder of the Christian Coalition and
usually a staunch defender of the death penalty.

As a member of your state’s board of pardons and paroles, Karla has turned
to you to ask for clemency. If a majority of your board agrees, and the governor
concurs, her sentence can be commuted to life in prison. She says that she will
be content to live out her days behind bars, "doing God’s work and being
an example for young people".

Richard Thornton (Deborah’s husband), victims’ rights groups and the
prosecutor in Karla’s case don’t believe she should live. They argue that
her conversion was faked, and urge people to look at the crime scene photos and
remember what she did. They point out that there is no life without parole in
your state, and that consequently Karla could be free in 5 years.

It is now time for your board to discuss Karla’s case. Review the facts and
the arguments, then vote on the question before you: Should you recommend that
the governor commute Karla’s sentence to life in prison with the possibility
of parole?

Here are links to some of the primary sources relating to this situation.